AU630116B2 - Reduction of oil-canning defects in roll-forming - Google Patents
Reduction of oil-canning defects in roll-forming Download PDFInfo
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- AU630116B2 AU630116B2 AU43028/89A AU4302889A AU630116B2 AU 630116 B2 AU630116 B2 AU 630116B2 AU 43028/89 A AU43028/89 A AU 43028/89A AU 4302889 A AU4302889 A AU 4302889A AU 630116 B2 AU630116 B2 AU 630116B2
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- fold
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Description
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OPI DATE 18/04/90 PCr AOJP DATE 24/05/90 APPLN. ID 43028 89 PCT NUMBER PCT/AU89/00403 INTERNATIONAL ArrIl- ,lU'IN r1-u 1olJLLv uiLv ,j i i i Y Y (PCT) (51) International Patent Classification 4 International Publication Number: WO 90/03233 B21D 1/02, 1/05, 5/14 Al B21D 5/16, 17/04, 19/04 (43) Internationial Publication 5 April 1990 (05.04.90) (21) International Application Number: PCT/AU89/00403 (81) Designated States: AT (European patent), AU, BE (European patent), CH (European patent), DE (European pa- (22) International Filing Date: 18 September 1989 (18,09.89) tent), FR (European patent), GB (European patent), IT (European patent), JP, KR, LU (European patent), NL (European patent), SE (European patent), US.
Priority data: PJ 0504 19 September 1988 (19,09,88) AU Published With international search report.
(71) Applicant (for all designated States except US): JOHN LY- SAGHT (AUSTRALIA) LIMITED [AU/AU]; 55 Sussex Street, Sydney, NSW 2000 (AU).
(72) Inventor; and Inventor/Applicant (for US only): YUEN, Wai, Yee, Daniel [AU/AU]; 26 Euroka Street, West Wollongong, NSW 2500 (AU).
(74)Agent: SMITH SHELSTON BEADLE; 7/207 Great North Road, Five Dock, NSW 2046 (AU).
(54)Title: REDUCTION OF OIL-CANNING DEFECTS IN ROLL-FORMING 3 (57) Abstract A metal sheet (10) is pre-treated by passing it between two ironing rolls 5) to plastically strain elongated narrow zones thereof in a manner causing 6 localised elongation thereof. Subsequently the sheet is roll-formed to produce folds therein respectively coinciding with those zones. The elongation of the zones due to the plastic straining at least partly compensates for the longitudinal contraction thereof caused by the folding, thereby reducing localised buckles, so called oil-canning defects, in the finished article.
Z z 0 WO 90/03233 PCT/AU89/00403 1 REDUCTION OF OIL-CANNING DEFECTS IN ROLL-FORMING FIELD OF THE INVENTION This invention relates to the roll-forming of metal strips or sheets, that is to say processes wherein a flat stock workpiece is passed between one or more stands of forming rolls which bend or curve one or more narrow zones extending from end to end of the workpiece about the longitudinal axis of the, or each, zone to produce the finished product.
In most, if not all, instances it is only those relatively narrow longitudinal zones which are plastically deformed during the roll-forming. For descriptive convenience those zones of the workpiece are referred to as the "fold zones" and the roll-formed bends or curves therein as "folds" hereinafter.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION.
A frequently occurring defect in roll-formed sheet metal articles is that known as "oil-canning", which manifests itself as localised buckles in the substantially flat areas between the folds.
The present invention arose from investigations bringing forth an appreciation of the following facts.
The deformation of a fold zone during roll-forming is usually associated with a stretching of the metal in the fold zone causing extension thereof in the transverse direction which, if the fold zone were free of constraint, would cause a permanent contraction of the fold zone in the longitudinal direction.
The fold zone is not free to contract because of the remainder of the workpiece and the result after rollforming is the generation of internal longitudinal tensile stresses in the fold zone and internal longitudinal 2 compressive stresses in the planar undeformed zone, or zones, adjacent to it.
Furthermore, those compressive stresses in the undeformed zone, or, more precisely, the longitudinal contraction in the fold zone, may be of sufficient magnitude to result in the localised buckling known as oilcanning in the undeformed zone in question, particularly if that zone is extensive in the transverse direction.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION.
An object of the present invention is to eliminate, prevent or at T •o least reduce the severity of oil-canning defects in roll-formed articles.
The invention achieves that object by plastically straining the metal of the, or each, fold zone of the article in a manner causing localised elongation thereof.
.Ideally the magnitude of the fold zone elongation due to the plastic straining equates with and cancels the effect of the longitudinal contraction of the fold zone induced by the roll-forming, to leave the roll-formed zone, and the resultant work as a whole, stress-free in the O• Q longitudinal direction, and thus devoid of oil-canning deformation. Even if exact equivalence of the treatment induced elongation and roll-forming contraction of the fold zone is not achieved in practice, substantial reduction in the severity of oil-canning defects may readily be obtained.
Thus the invention consists in a method of roll-forming a sheet S0° metal workpiece of the kind comprising passing the workpiece through at least one stand of the forming rolls to produce at least one longitudinally extending fold in the workpiece, characterised by the step of plastically straining a narrow elongated fold zone coinciding with the fold position in a manner causing localised elongation thereof to an extent substantially equalising the longitudinal contraction of the zone induced by the forming of the fold therein, thereby to substantially eliminate oil-canning 3e, defects in the finished work.
WO 90/03233 PCT/AU89/00403 3 The plastic straining of the fold zone may be effected by ironing the zone, that is to say by passing it between two ironing or pressure rolls whereby the thickness of the metal of the fold zone is reduced.
Preferably such ironing of the fold zone is effected by a stand of ironing rolls before the work piece is rollformed, that is to say the ironing is effectively a pretreatment of a substantially flat sheet which is subsequently roll-formed. However in other embodiments of the invention the plastic straining is effected simultaneously with the partial folding of the workpiece by one of the stands of the roll-forming rolls. Furthermore, in some instances, if the shape of the roll-formed work permits, its roll-formed fold zones may be post-treated to eliminate the oil canning induced by a previous rollforming process.
When pre-treating a sheet as aforesaid, at least one of the ironing rolls is a narrow roll having an effective axial width equal to the transverse width of the relevant fold zone. That narrow ironing roll is positioned to coincide with that fold zone. Thus the rolls work on the metal in the fold zone only and have no direct effect on the remainder of the workpiece. They plastically strain and reduce the thickness of the metal of the fold zone.
This results in its elongation in the direction of rolling.
The narrow ironing roll may be a plain cylindrical 1roll, in which event its effective width equals its actual width. For such a roll the width of the ironed zone is constant, and altering the pressure between the two ironing rolls alters the degree of plastic strain of the zone without changing its transverse width. Alternatively, the so-called narrow ironing roll may be a relatively wide, crowned roll, with only a central segment of the roll contacting the workpiece. In this event the effective width of the roll equals the width of that segment, and WO 90/03233 Pcr/AU89/00403 4 altering the pressure between the ironing rolls alters both the degree of straining and the width of the zone.
Usually more than one fold is required to be made in a workpiece to produce the finished work and it is convenient to pre-treat all of the corresponding fold zones simultaneously by a single pass of the workpiece through the ironing rolls. In that event it is preferred to have a single wide ironing roll, at least as wide axially as the overall transverse width of the workpiece, co-acting with a plurality of appropriately axially spaced apart narrow ironing rolls. Each so-called narrow roll is then effectively a segment of a wider composite or profiled roll.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS.
By way of example two embodiments of the invention are described hereinafter with reference to the accompanying drawings.
Figure 1 is a diagrammatic, partly sectioned, side elevation of a bearing end portion of a stand of ironing rolls adapted to pre-treat a workpiece in accordance with the invention.
Figure 2 is a greatly enlarged diagrammatic view of that portion of figure 1 within the enclosure 2 in that figure. The figure is drawn not to scale to enhance its readability.
Figure 3 is a view similar to figure 2 of the operative portion of a pair of roll-forming rolls adapted to partly fold and simultaneously plastically strain a fold zone of a workpiece.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS.
The stand of ironing rolls illustrated by figures 1 and 2 may be positioned as the first stand of a multi-stand ~xnr WO 90/03233 PCrAU9/04C'3 roll-forming mill. It comprises a conventional pedestal structure 3 and four rolls, namely a plain wide ironing roll 4, a segmented ironing roll 5 and two back up rolls 6.
The segmented ironing roll 5 comprises a conventional arbor 7, a plurality of plain cylindrical, smaller diameter spacers 8 and a plurality of slightly crowned, larger diameter segments 9 each constituting a narrow ironing roll as that term is used herein. The axial positions of the larger diameter segments 9 coincide with the respective fold zones of a'workpiece 10 being pre-treated, which in turn coincide with the longitudinal fold lines about which the workpiece 10 will be folded by subsequent conventional roll stands of the mill.
The outstanding segments 9 thin, and therefore elongate, the metal of the respective fold zones of the workpiece which they contact as the workpiece travels between the ironing rolls, thereby to pre-treat the workpiece as described above.
The required degree of plastic working of the relevant fold zone or zones is related to the nature of the finished work, in particular, the thickness of the metal and the extent to which it is folded. Usually there is little difficulty in determining the appropriate parameters by a process of trial and error.
It may be that individual fold zones of a single workpiece require different degrees of straining. This may sometimes be effected conveniently by passing the workpiece sequentially through two or more ironing roll stands.
Alternatively, the pressure loading on the individual narrow rolls of a plurality of same in one stand may be separately adjustable.
By way of example, attention is directed to figure 2 in which the curvature of the crown is exaggerated to WO 90/03233 PCT/AU89/00403 6 enable other dimensions to be seen. The situation illustrated in that figure, wherein the narrow ironing roll has a nominal diameter of 100 mm., the effective width (dimension A) is about 10 mm., the maximum thickness reduction (dimension B) is about 0.03 mm., and the crown radius is about 400 mm., is satisfactory for pre-treating a steel workpiece of 0.55 mm. thickness when the future fold is to be through 90o with a corner radius of 6 mm.. In these circumstances the roll may be turned at say 100 rpm., giving a strip speed of about 30 m/min.
Figure 3 shows a pair of roll-forming rolls 11 and 12 respectively, being the first met stage of a roll-forming mill producing the first stage of what may ultimately be a 900 fold in a workpiece 13. The roll 11 has a protruberant peripheral edge margin 14 which locally thins and elongates the fold zone of the workpiece. The downstream rollforming rolls may be quite conventional without such a protruberant margin. In the figure the extent to which the margin 14 projects has been exaggerated and the radius of curvature of its profile decreased relative to the scale of the figure as a whole.
It will be appreciated that the presence or otherwise of back up rolls for the ironing rolls and the nature of those rolls, when present, are matters of design choice not fundamental to the invention. Furthermore, if a segmented ironing roll such as roll 5 is used, it is not necessarily a multi-component roll; it may be a one piece profiled roll in which the segments constituting the individual narrow ironing rolls are integral with each other. Likewise the edge margin of a combined forming and zone straining roll, such as margin 14, may be a separate component from the main body of the forming roll with which it is associated.
Claims (9)
1. A method of roll-forming a sheet metal workpiece of the kind comprising passing the workpiece through at least one stand of forming rolls to produce at least one longitudinally extending fold in the workpiece, characterised by the step of plastically straining a narrow elongated fold zone coinciding with the fold position in a manner causing localised elongation thereof to an extent substantially equalising the longitudinal contraction of the zone induced by the forming of the fold therein, thereby to substantially eliminate oil-canning defects in the S" finished work.
2. A method according to claim 1 wherein the straining step is eo effected by passing the workpiece between a pair of ironing rolls at least one of which is a narrow roll having an effective axial width substantially equal to the transverse width of said fold zone.
3. A method according to claim 2 wherein the degree of plastic strain is adjusted by adjusting the pressure between the two ironing rolls.
4. A method according to claim 1 wherein the straining step is effected before the fold is formed. r•
5. A method according to claim 1 wherein the straining step is effected as the fold is being formed.
6. A method according to claim 5 wherein the straining step is effected by a protruberant edge margin of a roll forming roll.
7. A method according to claim 1 wherein a plurality of folds are required further characterised in that all of the corresponding fold zones are plastically strained simultaneously.
8. A method according to claim 7 wherein the fold zones are strained by passing the workpiece between a pair of ironing rolls of which at least one comprises a plurality of radially protruding portions corresponding in position to the respective fold zones and each having an effective r Cr WO 90/03233 PCT/AU89/00403 8 axial width substantially equal to the transverse width of its corresponding fold zone.
9. A method according to claim 1 wherein the straining step is effected by passing the workpiece between a pair of ironing rolls, wherein the workpiece is a sheet of steel of 0.55 mm. thickness and the fold is a 900 bend with a corner radius of 6 mm., wherein the transverse width of the folding zone is substantially 10 mm. and the reduction in thickness at the centre of the zone is substantially 0.03mm.. A roll forming roll for use in performing a method according to claim 6 having a protruberant edge margin.
Priority Applications (1)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
---|---|---|---|
AU43028/89A AU630116B2 (en) | 1988-09-19 | 1989-09-18 | Reduction of oil-canning defects in roll-forming |
Applications Claiming Priority (3)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
---|---|---|---|
AUPJ050488 | 1988-09-19 | ||
AUPJ0504 | 1988-09-19 | ||
AU43028/89A AU630116B2 (en) | 1988-09-19 | 1989-09-18 | Reduction of oil-canning defects in roll-forming |
Publications (2)
Publication Number | Publication Date |
---|---|
AU4302889A AU4302889A (en) | 1990-04-18 |
AU630116B2 true AU630116B2 (en) | 1992-10-22 |
Family
ID=25626264
Family Applications (1)
Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
---|---|---|---|
AU43028/89A Ceased AU630116B2 (en) | 1988-09-19 | 1989-09-18 | Reduction of oil-canning defects in roll-forming |
Country Status (1)
Country | Link |
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AU (1) | AU630116B2 (en) |
Cited By (2)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
WO2001097991A1 (en) * | 2000-06-20 | 2001-12-27 | Bhp Steel (Jla) Pty Ltd | Improvements in roll-forming sheet material |
AU2001265696B2 (en) * | 2000-06-20 | 2006-07-20 | Bluescope Steel Limited | Improvements in roll-forming sheet material |
Citations (2)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
DE582501C (en) * | 1931-03-08 | 1933-10-23 | Louis Wild | Device for mortising sheet metal |
US2326715A (en) * | 1941-02-13 | 1943-08-10 | Sharon Steel Corp | Manufacture of center stretched strip |
-
1989
- 1989-09-18 AU AU43028/89A patent/AU630116B2/en not_active Ceased
Patent Citations (2)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
DE582501C (en) * | 1931-03-08 | 1933-10-23 | Louis Wild | Device for mortising sheet metal |
US2326715A (en) * | 1941-02-13 | 1943-08-10 | Sharon Steel Corp | Manufacture of center stretched strip |
Cited By (2)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
WO2001097991A1 (en) * | 2000-06-20 | 2001-12-27 | Bhp Steel (Jla) Pty Ltd | Improvements in roll-forming sheet material |
AU2001265696B2 (en) * | 2000-06-20 | 2006-07-20 | Bluescope Steel Limited | Improvements in roll-forming sheet material |
Also Published As
Publication number | Publication date |
---|---|
AU4302889A (en) | 1990-04-18 |
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